Mirabilis multiflora
Mirabilis multiflora is a species of flowering plant in the four o'clock family known by the common names Colorado four-o'clock or desert four-o'clock that is native to the southwestern United States from California to Colorado and Texas, as well as far northern Mexico, where it grows in mostly dry habitat types in a number of regions.
Description
It is a perennial herb growing upright to about in maximum height. The leaves are oppositely arranged on the spreading stem branches. Each fleshy leaf has an oval or rounded blade up to long and is hairless or sparsely hairy. In winter, the plant dies back to the ground and its stem breaks off at ground level, though it reemerges in mid winter or spring. It dies back in extreme drought as well.The flowers occur in leaf axils on the upper branches. Usually six flowers bloom in a bell-shaped involucre of five partly fused bracts. Each five-lobed, funnel-shaped flower is wide and magenta in color.